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Reported £20bn gap in public finances same size as Tories’ national insurance cuts, says economic expert
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Reported £20bn gap in public finances same size as Tories’ national insurance cuts, says economic expert
Live, rolling coverage of business, economics and financial markets as UK chancellor Rachel Reeves is set to reveal state of the country’s public finances
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At least 12 Tory MPs set up consultancy firms as election defeat loomed
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Olive oil fraud and mislabelling cases hit record high in EU
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Labour must speed up wind power expansion or miss targets, says renewables industry
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Vodafone says Labour must let it merge with Three UK to deliver nationwide 5G
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Tories ‘deliberately covered up’ true state of public finances, says minister
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Port operators to seek compensation if post-Brexit trade barriers are lowered
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Mike Lynch  
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Call to ban sponsors from sport as hidden harms are revealed
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Wealth taxes could raise £10bn to help plug Tory budget hole
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Chain to close six UK cinemas in cost-cutting drive
Today's agenda
All eyes are on the Treasury today, as UK chancellor Rachel Reeves prepares to issue an update on the state of the country’s public finances and what the Labour party has inherited from the former Tory government.

Reeves is expected to tell MPs that the Tories left a £20bn hole in government spending for essential public services.And a think tank has now said that the £20bn shortfall is equivalent to the Tories’ pre-election national insurance cuts.

Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, told BBC Breakfast: "It is very striking that if this problem is about £20bn big, that is exactly the scale of the national insurance cuts implemented by Jeremy Hunt just before the election.

"Now, if those cuts were implemented in the knowledge that there was this kind of hole, that is not good policy, to put it mildly."

The Tory government announced 2p would be cut from national insurance in last year’s autumn statement, and announced a further 2p cut in this year’s spring budget.

The combined cuts were expected to save the average earner £900 a year.

However, the former government was said to have been been looking at further public spending cuts, had the Tories won last month’s election, as one way to pay for the tax reduction. That was despite economists’ warnings that such a move would cause public services to buckle.

Stay tuned as we look ahead to Reeves’s address, which is expected to lay the groundwork for tax rises, cuts to public spending and delays to some big infrastructure projects.

The agenda
• 9:30am BST: UK mortgage approvals, net mortgage lending and consumer credit for June
• 3:30pm BST: UK chancellor Rachel Reeves to set out state of public finances

We’ll be tracking all the main events throughout the day ...
Opinion
Fear of a Truss repeat should not deter Reeves from rewriting spending rules
Fear of a Truss repeat should not deter Reeves from rewriting spending rules
We were promised a 15-hour working week. What’s the hold-up?
How bad are Britain’s finances?  
Key questions and answers
Media
TV  
Strictly: further allegations emerge about behaviour of Giovanni Pernice
Strictly: further allegations emerge about behaviour of Giovanni Pernice
Paris  
Olympics camera operators urged to avoid ‘sexism’ in filming female athletes
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